Amino acids as main substrates for sulfate-reducing bacteria in surface sediment of a eutrophic bay

被引:11
|
作者
Takii, S [1 ]
机构
[1] Tokyo Metropolitan Univ, Grad Sch Sci, Dept Biol Sci, Tokyo 1920397, Japan
来源
关键词
amino acids; sediment; seston; substrates; sulfate-reducing bacteria; Tokyo Bay;
D O I
10.2323/jgam.49.329
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
The inner part of Tokyo Bay, Japan, is highly eutrophicated as shown by the frequent occurrence of red tide. The bottom water is anoxic during warm seasons especially at artificially dredged sites. In the sediment slurries prepared from surface sediment samples collected from the dredged sites, substrate addition stimulated the consumption of sulfate during anaerobic incubation. Of the substrates added, the seston composed mainly of diatom stimulated consumption more than lactate and acetate. Its effect was nearly equal to that of casamino acids. Casamino acids and some amino acids also accelerated the rate of sulfate reduction measured by the tracer method in sediment samples more than lactate or acetate. Anaerobic incubation of the sediment slurry amended with casamino acids showed that the consumption of amino acids was retarded by the addition of molybdate (final concentration; 20mm). In the slurry amended with only molybdate, glutamate was accumulated distinctively and linearly with time. Its accumulation rate in molar base was comparable to the rate of sulfate reduction. These results suggested that amino acids were the main substrates for sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in the sediment. The MPN values of SRB in these sediment samples were often higher with the enumeration medium containing casamino acids instead of lactate. Furthermore, during a week incubation of sediment slurries amended with substrates, casamino acids and seston more greatly stimulated the growth,of SRB enumerated by both media than lactate.
引用
收藏
页码:329 / 336
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] The Spatial Distribution of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria and Its Environmental Implication in Sediment from Zhanjiang Bay and Leizhou Bay, China
    Zeng, Xiang-yun
    Li, Feng
    Liang, Yan-yan
    Lin, Jin-qin
    Gan, Hua-yang
    Long, Xiao-lin
    Liang, Kai
    Liu, Xin
    Huo, Zhen-hai
    Wen, Jia-sheng
    Yang, Jia-yu
    Huang, Wen-rou
    Mo, Jue-ting
    JOURNAL OF PURE AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 2014, 8 : 393 - 400
  • [12] Effects of sulfate-reducing bacteria on methylmercury at the sediment–water interface
    Lingxia Zeng
    Guangjun Luo
    Tianrong He
    Yanna Guo
    Xiaoli Qian
    Journal of Environmental Sciences, 2016, 46 (08) : 214 - 219
  • [13] Sulfate-reducing bacteria in marine sediment (Aarhus Bay, Denmark): abundance and diversity related to geochemical zonation
    Leloup, Julie
    Fossing, Henrik
    Kohls, Katharina
    Holmkvist, Lars
    Borowski, Christian
    Jorgensen, Bo Barker
    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2009, 11 (05) : 1278 - 1291
  • [14] Vertical distribution of major sulfate-reducing bacteria in a shallow eutrophic meromictic lake
    Kubo, Kyoko
    Kojima, Hisaya
    Fukui, Manabu
    SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, 2014, 37 (07) : 510 - 519
  • [15] PHYSIOLOGY OF SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA
    HANSEN, TA
    MICROBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1988, 5 (03): : 81 - 84
  • [16] Phylogeny of sulfate-reducing bacteria
    Castro, HF
    Williams, NH
    Ogram, A
    FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2000, 31 (01) : 1 - 9
  • [17] BIOCHEMICAL STUDIES ON SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA .4. THE CYTOCHROME SYSTEM OF SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA
    ISHIMOTO, M
    KOYAMA, J
    NAGAI, Y
    JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1954, 41 (06): : 763 - 770
  • [18] Isolation and identification of sulfate-reducing bacteria from Pearl River sediment
    Lin, W.-T., 1600, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, 510640, China (29):
  • [19] SYSTEMATICS OF SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA
    BATTERSBY, NS
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED BACTERIOLOGY, 1983, 55 (03): : R2 - R2
  • [20] IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE OF SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA
    SMITH, AD
    ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1982, 133 (02) : 118 - 121